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Somalia: US accused of killing 22 troops in air strike

Security official says Americans were "misinformed" in a request that came from regional rival to hit al-Shabab.

28 Sep 2016 20:38 GMT

Al-Shabab denied that it had any fighters in the area of the air strike [Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP]

An American air strike in northern Somalia killed as many as 22 soldiers, an official from the region alleged, suggesting that the United States had been duped into attacking Somali troops.

The Galmudug region's Security Minister Osman Issa said 22 of his soldiers had been killed in the strike early Wednesday, adding that the rival region of Puntland had requested air support on the pretext that the men were al-Shabab fighters.

"Puntland misinformed the United States and thus our forces were bombed," Issa told Reuters news agency.

In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis told reporters that the United States had carried out a "self-defence air strike" after Somali troops took fire from fighters as they tried to stop an improvised explosive device making network.

Davis said nine al-Shabab cadres were killed in the strike, but the Pentagon was looking into reports that it could have killed others.

"We will look at the reports to see if they are credible, and if they are credible we'll investigate them," Davis said.

A Puntland police officer said the attack had killed "more than a dozen" members of al-Shabab, which is waging an insurgency against Somalia's western-backed government and regional authorities.

Galmudug and Puntland regions have often clashed over territory.

The United States has launched many air strikes in Somalia against al-Shabab.

The armed group denied that it had any fighters in the area of the latest incident. "We neither have a base nor forces in Galkayo area," Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, al-Shabab's military operations spokesman, told Reuters.

Protesters in Galmudug's capital Galkayo burned US flags and images of President Barack Obama in protest, witnesses said. Shops closed because of the demonstrations.

Somalia is trying to rebuild after two decades of war. The conflict that began in 1991 left the Horn of Africa nation riven by clan rivalries and struggling with an insurgency.